96 , -II- ,$' '> ,':',, . .,' , ':,{' ." ì ""\ . ;.-'-01: . ": w-'* " ':$: "'- /c" : ft"!F' " / ',- "'......... '\. "- p,. ,J \. -> -""'" IE> --<1' t " When you talk with some- one out of town, it gives you both a real feeling of being to- gether . . . not just \vhile you're talking, but for a long time afterward. Telephoning is personal, easy, economical You can make somebody happy with a call right now. . n , ,,'?< .' ,,,. .< . '::,. ('-- :- - ... ../' ... .... .......:- $- K. , , . . . t' , .'$\ ". . .... -:" ..... ::.l { '< .:.... ... ". ,'. :..: ' '(0'> ...... ",-'< . "':''''4.... ,,, 4 '> "" ou'll both eel better LONG DISTANCE RATES ARE LOW Note how far you can call for a little From NEW YORK CITY to New Haven . 40 Philadelphia . 40 Boston 55 Washington, D.C. 60 Cleveland 85 Cincinnati $lQ2 Chicago . . $1 Los Angeles S2QQ These are the Station-to-Station rates for the first three minutes, after 6 o'clock every night and all day Sunday. Add the 10% federal excise tax CALL BY NUMBER IT S TWICE AS FAST BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM bate. One Labour member (apparently unaware that he wasn't speaking for all his colleagues) said rousingly that It had taken Colonel Nasser to unite the House of Commons. Nasser has also united the Conservative Party and has ranged it behind Sir Anthony Eden more solidly than at any time since he became Prime Minister, which is remarkable indeed. The press reactions tu the crisis have not been anything like so united. The most calming voices have been thost- of the Manchester Guardian and the liberal News Chronicle, which have coun"elled caution, praised Mr. Dulles, and insisted that the Egyptian dispute should be settled by the SecurIty Council instead of by force, which could result in the security of everyone's depart- ing from this globe forever. The pop- ular press has taken a tough line with Nasser. So, with downright belliger- ence, has the Times The Old Thun- derer has Indeed been thundering, warning that "anyone who thInks that a victory for Nasser would not encour- age other extremIst demands against the oil fields-and against strategic bases-should confine himself to tid- dleywinks and blind man's buff." One thing that seems certaIn is that Print- ing House Square does not intend to be caught out by the lens of history taking any such compromising attitude wIth Nasser's Egypt as it did under the Munich umbrella with Hitler's Ger- many. DEAL thunder has been knocking 1'.. and banging around these islands during this momentous week. The junior hurricane that swept in from- the south two weekends back tore up trees, telephone WIres, and hikers' camps, plowed through gardens and crops, knocked out the Kent apple harvest, and left the countryside looking as though a battle had been fought across it Yes- terday, three feet of hailstones were re- ported piled up on the main street of Tunbridge "\AT ells, a spa much favored by the elderly because of its pleasant climate Hay is rotting in the farmers' wet fields. Nasser and the weather to- gether have darkened the summer all round. -MOLLIE PANTER-DoWNES e 9:00 P.M_ 4-People s Choice 5- Wrestling 7-Star Tonight 9-Five Against Crime 1 I-Police Call I3-Boring -The Post vVe'll be the judge of that.